/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * relation.h
 *      Definitions for planner's internal data structures.
 *
 *
 * Portions Copyright (c) 2012-2014, TransLattice, Inc.
 * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2017, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
 * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
 *
 * This source code file contains modifications made by THL A29 Limited ("Tencent Modifications").
 * All Tencent Modifications are Copyright (C) 2023 THL A29 Limited.
 *
 * src/include/nodes/relation.h
 *
 *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
#ifndef RELATION_H
#define RELATION_H

#include "access/sdir.h"
#include "fmgr.h"
#include "lib/stringinfo.h"
#include "nodes/params.h"
#include "nodes/parsenodes.h"
#include "storage/block.h"


#ifdef XCP
/*
 * Distribution
 *
 * Distribution is an attribute of distributed plan node. It describes on which
 * node execution results can be found.
 */
typedef struct Distribution
{
    NodeTag        type;

    char        distributionType;
    Node       *distributionExpr;
    Bitmapset  *nodes;
    Bitmapset  *restrictNodes;
} Distribution;
#endif

#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
/*
 * The location of DML result relation in JOINREL
 */
typedef enum ResultRelLocation {
	RESULT_REL_NONE,		/* Not found */
	RESULT_REL_INNER,		/* Appears in inner subpath */
	RESULT_REL_OUTER		/* Appears in outer subpath */
} ResultRelLocation;
#endif

/*
 * Relids
 *        Set of relation identifiers (indexes into the rangetable).
 */
typedef Bitmapset *Relids;

/*
 * When looking for a "cheapest path", this enum specifies whether we want
 * cheapest startup cost or cheapest total cost.
 */
typedef enum CostSelector
{
    STARTUP_COST, TOTAL_COST
} CostSelector;

/*
 * The cost estimate produced by cost_qual_eval() includes both a one-time
 * (startup) cost, and a per-tuple cost.
 */
typedef struct QualCost
{
    Cost        startup;        /* one-time cost */
    Cost        per_tuple;        /* per-evaluation cost */
} QualCost;

/*
 * Costing aggregate function execution requires these statistics about
 * the aggregates to be executed by a given Agg node.  Note that the costs
 * include the execution costs of the aggregates' argument expressions as
 * well as the aggregate functions themselves.  Also, the fields must be
 * defined so that initializing the struct to zeroes with memset is correct.
 */
typedef struct AggClauseCosts
{
    int            numAggs;        /* total number of aggregate functions */
    int            numOrderedAggs; /* number w/ DISTINCT/ORDER BY/WITHIN GROUP */
    bool        hasNonPartial;    /* does any agg not support partial mode? */
    bool        hasNonSerial;    /* is any partial agg non-serializable? */
    QualCost    transCost;        /* total per-input-row execution costs */
    Cost        finalCost;        /* total per-aggregated-row costs */
    Size        transitionSpace;    /* space for pass-by-ref transition data */
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
    bool        hasOnlyDistinct;
    bool        hasOrder;
#endif
} AggClauseCosts;

/*
 * This enum identifies the different types of "upper" (post-scan/join)
 * relations that we might deal with during planning.
 */
typedef enum UpperRelationKind
{
    UPPERREL_SETOP,                /* result of UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT, if any */
    UPPERREL_GROUP_AGG,            /* result of grouping/aggregation, if any */
    UPPERREL_WINDOW,            /* result of window functions, if any */
    UPPERREL_DISTINCT,            /* result of "SELECT DISTINCT", if any */
    UPPERREL_ORDERED,            /* result of ORDER BY, if any */
    UPPERREL_FINAL                /* result of any remaining top-level actions */
    /* NB: UPPERREL_FINAL must be last enum entry; it's used to size arrays */
} UpperRelationKind;


/*----------
 * PlannerGlobal
 *        Global information for planning/optimization
 *
 * PlannerGlobal holds state for an entire planner invocation; this state
 * is shared across all levels of sub-Queries that exist in the command being
 * planned.
 *----------
 */
typedef struct PlannerGlobal
{
    NodeTag        type;

    ParamListInfo boundParams;    /* Param values provided to planner() */

    List       *subplans;        /* Plans for SubPlan nodes */

    List       *subroots;        /* PlannerInfos for SubPlan nodes */

    Bitmapset  *rewindPlanIDs;    /* indices of subplans that require REWIND */

    List       *finalrtable;    /* "flat" rangetable for executor */

    List       *finalrowmarks;    /* "flat" list of PlanRowMarks */

    List       *resultRelations;    /* "flat" list of integer RT indexes */

    List       *nonleafResultRelations; /* "flat" list of integer RT indexes */
    List       *rootResultRelations;    /* "flat" list of integer RT indexes */

    List       *relationOids;    /* OIDs of relations the plan depends on */

    List       *invalItems;        /* other dependencies, as PlanInvalItems */

    int            nParamExec;        /* number of PARAM_EXEC Params used */

    Index        lastPHId;        /* highest PlaceHolderVar ID assigned */

    Index        lastRowMarkId;    /* highest PlanRowMark ID assigned */

    int            lastPlanNodeId; /* highest plan node ID assigned */

    bool        transientPlan;    /* redo plan when TransactionXmin changes? */

    bool        dependsOnRole;    /* is plan specific to current role? */

    bool        parallelModeOK; /* parallel mode potentially OK? */

    bool        parallelModeNeeded; /* parallel mode actually required? */

	bool        hasCoordFuncs;

    char        maxParallelHazard;    /* worst PROPARALLEL hazard level */
} PlannerGlobal;

/* macro for fetching the Plan associated with a SubPlan node */
#define planner_subplan_get_plan(root, subplan) \
    ((Plan *) list_nth((root)->glob->subplans, (subplan)->plan_id - 1))


/*----------
 * PlannerInfo
 *        Per-query information for planning/optimization
 *
 * This struct is conventionally called "root" in all the planner routines.
 * It holds links to all of the planner's working state, in addition to the
 * original Query.  Note that at present the planner extensively modifies
 * the passed-in Query data structure; someday that should stop.
 *----------
 */
typedef struct PlannerInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Query       *parse;            /* the Query being planned */

    PlannerGlobal *glob;        /* global info for current planner run */

    Index        query_level;    /* 1 at the outermost Query */

    struct PlannerInfo *parent_root;    /* NULL at outermost Query */

    /*
     * plan_params contains the expressions that this query level needs to
     * make available to a lower query level that is currently being planned.
     * outer_params contains the paramIds of PARAM_EXEC Params that outer
     * query levels will make available to this query level.
     */
    List       *plan_params;    /* list of PlannerParamItems, see below */
    Bitmapset  *outer_params;

    /*
     * simple_rel_array holds pointers to "base rels" and "other rels" (see
     * comments for RelOptInfo for more info).  It is indexed by rangetable
     * index (so entry 0 is always wasted).  Entries can be NULL when an RTE
     * does not correspond to a base relation, such as a join RTE or an
     * unreferenced view RTE; or if the RelOptInfo hasn't been made yet.
     */
    struct RelOptInfo **simple_rel_array;    /* All 1-rel RelOptInfos */
    int            simple_rel_array_size;    /* allocated size of array */

    /*
     * simple_rte_array is the same length as simple_rel_array and holds
     * pointers to the associated rangetable entries.  This lets us avoid
     * rt_fetch(), which can be a bit slow once large inheritance sets have
     * been expanded.
     */
    RangeTblEntry **simple_rte_array;    /* rangetable as an array */

    /*
     * all_baserels is a Relids set of all base relids (but not "other"
     * relids) in the query; that is, the Relids identifier of the final join
     * we need to form.  This is computed in make_one_rel, just before we
     * start making Paths.
     */
    Relids        all_baserels;

    /*
     * nullable_baserels is a Relids set of base relids that are nullable by
     * some outer join in the jointree; these are rels that are potentially
     * nullable below the WHERE clause, SELECT targetlist, etc.  This is
     * computed in deconstruct_jointree.
     */
    Relids        nullable_baserels;

    /*
     * join_rel_list is a list of all join-relation RelOptInfos we have
     * considered in this planning run.  For small problems we just scan the
     * list to do lookups, but when there are many join relations we build a
     * hash table for faster lookups.  The hash table is present and valid
     * when join_rel_hash is not NULL.  Note that we still maintain the list
     * even when using the hash table for lookups; this simplifies life for
     * GEQO.
     */
    List       *join_rel_list;    /* list of join-relation RelOptInfos */
    struct HTAB *join_rel_hash; /* optional hashtable for join relations */

    /*
     * When doing a dynamic-programming-style join search, join_rel_level[k]
     * is a list of all join-relation RelOptInfos of level k, and
     * join_cur_level is the current level.  New join-relation RelOptInfos are
     * automatically added to the join_rel_level[join_cur_level] list.
     * join_rel_level is NULL if not in use.
     */
    List      **join_rel_level; /* lists of join-relation RelOptInfos */
    int            join_cur_level; /* index of list being extended */

    List       *init_plans;        /* init SubPlans for query */

    List       *cte_plan_ids;    /* per-CTE-item list of subplan IDs */

    List       *multiexpr_params;    /* List of Lists of Params for MULTIEXPR
                                     * subquery outputs */

    List       *eq_classes;        /* list of active EquivalenceClasses */

    List       *canon_pathkeys; /* list of "canonical" PathKeys */

    List       *left_join_clauses;    /* list of RestrictInfos for mergejoinable
                                     * outer join clauses w/nonnullable var on
                                     * left */

    List       *right_join_clauses; /* list of RestrictInfos for mergejoinable
                                     * outer join clauses w/nonnullable var on
                                     * right */

    List       *full_join_clauses;    /* list of RestrictInfos for mergejoinable
                                     * full join clauses */

    List       *join_info_list; /* list of SpecialJoinInfos */

    List       *append_rel_list;    /* list of AppendRelInfos */

    List       *rowMarks;        /* list of PlanRowMarks */

    List       *placeholder_list;    /* list of PlaceHolderInfos */

    List       *fkey_list;        /* list of ForeignKeyOptInfos */

    List       *query_pathkeys; /* desired pathkeys for query_planner() */

    List       *group_pathkeys; /* groupClause pathkeys, if any */
    List       *window_pathkeys;    /* pathkeys of bottom window, if any */
    List       *distinct_pathkeys;    /* distinctClause pathkeys, if any */
    List       *sort_pathkeys;    /* sortClause pathkeys, if any */

	List	   *part_schemes;	/* Canonicalised partition schemes used in the
								 * query. */

    List       *initial_rels;    /* RelOptInfos we are now trying to join */

    /* Use fetch_upper_rel() to get any particular upper rel */
    List       *upper_rels[UPPERREL_FINAL + 1]; /* upper-rel RelOptInfos */

    /* Result tlists chosen by grouping_planner for upper-stage processing */
    struct PathTarget *upper_targets[UPPERREL_FINAL + 1];

    /*
     * grouping_planner passes back its final processed targetlist here, for
     * use in relabeling the topmost tlist of the finished Plan.
     */
    List       *processed_tlist;

    /* Fields filled during create_plan() for use in setrefs.c */
    AttrNumber *grouping_map;    /* for GroupingFunc fixup */
    List       *minmax_aggs;    /* List of MinMaxAggInfos */

    MemoryContext planner_cxt;    /* context holding PlannerInfo */

    double        total_table_pages;    /* # of pages in all tables of query */

    double        tuple_fraction; /* tuple_fraction passed to query_planner */
    double        limit_tuples;    /* limit_tuples passed to query_planner */

    Index        qual_security_level;    /* minimum security_level for quals */
    /* Note: qual_security_level is zero if there are no securityQuals */
#ifdef _MLS_
    bool        hasClsPolicy;   /* true if has cls policy bound */
#endif

    bool        hasInheritedTarget; /* true if parse->resultRelation is an
                                     * inheritance child rel */
    bool        hasJoinRTEs;    /* true if any RTEs are RTE_JOIN kind */
    bool        hasLateralRTEs; /* true if any RTEs are marked LATERAL */
    bool        hasDeletedRTEs; /* true if any RTE was deleted from jointree */
    bool        hasHavingQual;    /* true if havingQual was non-null */
    bool        hasPseudoConstantQuals; /* true if any RestrictInfo has
                                         * pseudoconstant = true */
    bool        hasRecursion;    /* true if planning a recursive WITH item */

    /* These fields are used only when hasRecursion is true: */
    int            wt_param_id;    /* PARAM_EXEC ID for the work table */
    struct Path *non_recursive_path;    /* a path for non-recursive term */

    /* These fields are workspace for createplan.c */
    Relids        curOuterRels;    /* outer rels above current node */
    List       *curOuterParams; /* not-yet-assigned NestLoopParams */
#ifdef XCP
    Bitmapset  *curOuterRestrict;     /* Datanodes where outer plan is executed */
#endif

    /* optional private data for join_search_hook, e.g., GEQO */
    void       *join_search_private;

        /* Does this query modify any partition key columns? */
        bool            partColsUpdated;
#ifdef XCP
    /*
     * This is NULL for a SELECT query (NULL distribution means "Coordinator"
     * everywhere in the planner. For INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE it should match
     * to the target table distribution.
     */
    Distribution *distribution; /* Query result distribution */
    bool        recursiveOk;
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
    bool        haspart_tobe_modify;
    Index        partrelindex;
    Bitmapset    *partpruning;
	List        *udf_quals;    /* quals that contain CN-udf */
#endif
#endif
} PlannerInfo;


/*
 * In places where it's known that simple_rte_array[] must have been prepared
 * already, we just index into it to fetch RTEs.  In code that might be
 * executed before or after entering query_planner(), use this macro.
 */
#define planner_rt_fetch(rti, root) \
    ((root)->simple_rte_array ? (root)->simple_rte_array[rti] : \
     rt_fetch(rti, (root)->parse->rtable))

/*
 * If multiple relations are partitioned the same way, all such partitions
 * will have a pointer to the same PartitionScheme.  A list of PartitionScheme
 * objects is attached to the PlannerInfo.  By design, the partition scheme
 * incorporates only the general properties of the partition method (LIST vs.
 * RANGE, number of partitioning columns and the type information for each)
 * and not the specific bounds.
 *
 * We store the opclass-declared input data types instead of the partition key
 * datatypes since the former rather than the latter are used to compare
 * partition bounds. Since partition key data types and the opclass declared
 * input data types are expected to be binary compatible (per ResolveOpClass),
 * both of those should have same byval and length properties.
 */
typedef struct PartitionSchemeData
{
	char		strategy;		/* partition strategy */
	int16		partnatts;		/* number of partition attributes */
	Oid		   *partopfamily;	/* OIDs of operator families */
	Oid		   *partopcintype;	/* OIDs of opclass declared input data types */
	Oid		   *partcollation;	/* OIDs of partitioning collations */

	/* Cached information about partition key data types. */
	int16	   *parttyplen;
	bool	   *parttypbyval;

	/* Cached information about partition comparison functions. */
	FmgrInfo   *partsupfunc;
}			PartitionSchemeData;

typedef struct PartitionSchemeData *PartitionScheme;

/*----------
 * RelOptInfo
 *        Per-relation information for planning/optimization
 *
 * For planning purposes, a "base rel" is either a plain relation (a table)
 * or the output of a sub-SELECT or function that appears in the range table.
 * In either case it is uniquely identified by an RT index.  A "joinrel"
 * is the joining of two or more base rels.  A joinrel is identified by
 * the set of RT indexes for its component baserels.  We create RelOptInfo
 * nodes for each baserel and joinrel, and store them in the PlannerInfo's
 * simple_rel_array and join_rel_list respectively.
 *
 * Note that there is only one joinrel for any given set of component
 * baserels, no matter what order we assemble them in; so an unordered
 * set is the right datatype to identify it with.
 *
 * We also have "other rels", which are like base rels in that they refer to
 * single RT indexes; but they are not part of the join tree, and are given
 * a different RelOptKind to identify them.
 * Currently the only kind of otherrels are those made for member relations
 * of an "append relation", that is an inheritance set or UNION ALL subquery.
 * An append relation has a parent RTE that is a base rel, which represents
 * the entire append relation.  The member RTEs are otherrels.  The parent
 * is present in the query join tree but the members are not.  The member
 * RTEs and otherrels are used to plan the scans of the individual tables or
 * subqueries of the append set; then the parent baserel is given Append
 * and/or MergeAppend paths comprising the best paths for the individual
 * member rels.  (See comments for AppendRelInfo for more information.)
 *
 * At one time we also made otherrels to represent join RTEs, for use in
 * handling join alias Vars.  Currently this is not needed because all join
 * alias Vars are expanded to non-aliased form during preprocess_expression.
 *
 * We also have relations representing joins between child relations of
 * different partitioned tables. These relations are not added to
 * join_rel_level lists as they are not joined directly by the dynamic
 * programming algorithm.
 *
 * There is also a RelOptKind for "upper" relations, which are RelOptInfos
 * that describe post-scan/join processing steps, such as aggregation.
 * Many of the fields in these RelOptInfos are meaningless, but their Path
 * fields always hold Paths showing ways to do that processing step.
 *
 * Lastly, there is a RelOptKind for "dead" relations, which are base rels
 * that we have proven we don't need to join after all.
 *
 * Parts of this data structure are specific to various scan and join
 * mechanisms.  It didn't seem worth creating new node types for them.
 *
 *        relids - Set of base-relation identifiers; it is a base relation
 *                if there is just one, a join relation if more than one
 *        rows - estimated number of tuples in the relation after restriction
 *               clauses have been applied (ie, output rows of a plan for it)
 *        consider_startup - true if there is any value in keeping plain paths for
 *                           this rel on the basis of having cheap startup cost
 *        consider_param_startup - the same for parameterized paths
 *        reltarget - Default Path output tlist for this rel; normally contains
 *                    Var and PlaceHolderVar nodes for the values we need to
 *                    output from this relation.
 *                    List is in no particular order, but all rels of an
 *                    appendrel set must use corresponding orders.
 *                    NOTE: in an appendrel child relation, may contain
 *                    arbitrary expressions pulled up from a subquery!
 *        pathlist - List of Path nodes, one for each potentially useful
 *                   method of generating the relation
 *        ppilist - ParamPathInfo nodes for parameterized Paths, if any
 *        cheapest_startup_path - the pathlist member with lowest startup cost
 *            (regardless of ordering) among the unparameterized paths;
 *            or NULL if there is no unparameterized path
 *        cheapest_total_path - the pathlist member with lowest total cost
 *            (regardless of ordering) among the unparameterized paths;
 *            or if there is no unparameterized path, the path with lowest
 *            total cost among the paths with minimum parameterization
 *        cheapest_unique_path - for caching cheapest path to produce unique
 *            (no duplicates) output from relation; NULL if not yet requested
 *        cheapest_parameterized_paths - best paths for their parameterizations;
 *            always includes cheapest_total_path, even if that's unparameterized
 *        direct_lateral_relids - rels this rel has direct LATERAL references to
 *        lateral_relids - required outer rels for LATERAL, as a Relids set
 *            (includes both direct and indirect lateral references)
 *
 * If the relation is a base relation it will have these fields set:
 *
 *        relid - RTE index (this is redundant with the relids field, but
 *                is provided for convenience of access)
 *        rtekind - distinguishes plain relation, subquery, or function RTE
 *        min_attr, max_attr - range of valid AttrNumbers for rel
 *        attr_needed - array of bitmapsets indicating the highest joinrel
 *                in which each attribute is needed; if bit 0 is set then
 *                the attribute is needed as part of final targetlist
 *        attr_widths - cache space for per-attribute width estimates;
 *                      zero means not computed yet
 *        lateral_vars - lateral cross-references of rel, if any (list of
 *                       Vars and PlaceHolderVars)
 *        lateral_referencers - relids of rels that reference this one laterally
 *                (includes both direct and indirect lateral references)
 *        indexlist - list of IndexOptInfo nodes for relation's indexes
 *                    (always NIL if it's not a table)
 *        pages - number of disk pages in relation (zero if not a table)
 *        tuples - number of tuples in relation (not considering restrictions)
 *        allvisfrac - fraction of disk pages that are marked all-visible
 *        subroot - PlannerInfo for subquery (NULL if it's not a subquery)
 *        subplan_params - list of PlannerParamItems to be passed to subquery
 *
 *        Note: for a subquery, tuples and subroot are not set immediately
 *        upon creation of the RelOptInfo object; they are filled in when
 *        set_subquery_pathlist processes the object.
 *
 *        For otherrels that are appendrel members, these fields are filled
 *        in just as for a baserel, except we don't bother with lateral_vars.
 *
 * If the relation is either a foreign table or a join of foreign tables that
 * all belong to the same foreign server and are assigned to the same user to
 * check access permissions as (cf checkAsUser), these fields will be set:
 *
 *        serverid - OID of foreign server, if foreign table (else InvalidOid)
 *        userid - OID of user to check access as (InvalidOid means current user)
 *        useridiscurrent - we've assumed that userid equals current user
 *        fdwroutine - function hooks for FDW, if foreign table (else NULL)
 *        fdw_private - private state for FDW, if foreign table (else NULL)
 *
 * Two fields are used to cache knowledge acquired during the join search
 * about whether this rel is provably unique when being joined to given other
 * relation(s), ie, it can have at most one row matching any given row from
 * that join relation.  Currently we only attempt such proofs, and thus only
 * populate these fields, for base rels; but someday they might be used for
 * join rels too:
 *
 *        unique_for_rels - list of Relid sets, each one being a set of other
 *                    rels for which this one has been proven unique
 *        non_unique_for_rels - list of Relid sets, each one being a set of
 *                    other rels for which we have tried and failed to prove
 *                    this one unique
 *
 * The presence of the following fields depends on the restrictions
 * and joins that the relation participates in:
 *
 *        baserestrictinfo - List of RestrictInfo nodes, containing info about
 *                    each non-join qualification clause in which this relation
 *                    participates (only used for base rels)
 *        baserestrictcost - Estimated cost of evaluating the baserestrictinfo
 *                    clauses at a single tuple (only used for base rels)
 *        baserestrict_min_security - Smallest security_level found among
 *                    clauses in baserestrictinfo
 *        joininfo  - List of RestrictInfo nodes, containing info about each
 *                    join clause in which this relation participates (but
 *                    note this excludes clauses that might be derivable from
 *                    EquivalenceClasses)
 *        has_eclass_joins - flag that EquivalenceClass joins are possible
 *
 * Note: Keeping a restrictinfo list in the RelOptInfo is useful only for
 * base rels, because for a join rel the set of clauses that are treated as
 * restrict clauses varies depending on which sub-relations we choose to join.
 * (For example, in a 3-base-rel join, a clause relating rels 1 and 2 must be
 * treated as a restrictclause if we join {1} and {2 3} to make {1 2 3}; but
 * if we join {1 2} and {3} then that clause will be a restrictclause in {1 2}
 * and should not be processed again at the level of {1 2 3}.)    Therefore,
 * the restrictinfo list in the join case appears in individual JoinPaths
 * (field joinrestrictinfo), not in the parent relation.  But it's OK for
 * the RelOptInfo to store the joininfo list, because that is the same
 * for a given rel no matter how we form it.
 *
 * We store baserestrictcost in the RelOptInfo (for base relations) because
 * we know we will need it at least once (to price the sequential scan)
 * and may need it multiple times to price index scans.
 *
 * If the relation is partitioned, these fields will be set:
 *
 * 		part_scheme - Partitioning scheme of the relation
 * 		nparts - Number of partitions
 *		boundinfo - Partition bounds
 *		partition_qual - Partition constraint if not the root
 * 		part_rels - RelOptInfos for each partition
 * 		partexprs, nullable_partexprs - Partition key expressions
 *		partitioned_child_rels - RT indexes of unpruned partitions of
 *								 relation that are partitioned tables
 *								 themselves
 *
 * Note: A base relation always has only one set of partition keys, but a join
 * relation may have as many sets of partition keys as the number of relations
 * being joined. partexprs and nullable_partexprs are arrays containing
 * part_scheme->partnatts elements each. Each of these elements is a list of
 * partition key expressions.  For a base relation each list in partexprs
 * contains only one expression and nullable_partexprs is not populated. For a
 * join relation, partexprs and nullable_partexprs contain partition key
 * expressions from non-nullable and nullable relations resp. Lists at any
 * given position in those arrays together contain as many elements as the
 * number of joining relations.
 *----------
 */
typedef enum RelOptKind
{
    RELOPT_BASEREL,
    RELOPT_JOINREL,
    RELOPT_OTHER_MEMBER_REL,
	RELOPT_OTHER_JOINREL,
    RELOPT_UPPER_REL,
    RELOPT_DEADREL
} RelOptKind;

/*
 * Is the given relation a simple relation i.e a base or "other" member
 * relation?
 */
#define IS_SIMPLE_REL(rel) \
    ((rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_BASEREL || \
     (rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_OTHER_MEMBER_REL)

/* Is the given relation a join relation? */
#define IS_JOIN_REL(rel)	\
	((rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_JOINREL || \
	 (rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_OTHER_JOINREL)

/* Is the given relation an upper relation? */
#define IS_UPPER_REL(rel) ((rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_UPPER_REL)

/* Is the given relation an "other" relation? */
#define IS_OTHER_REL(rel) \
	((rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_OTHER_MEMBER_REL || \
	 (rel)->reloptkind == RELOPT_OTHER_JOINREL)

typedef struct RelOptInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    RelOptKind    reloptkind;

    /* all relations included in this RelOptInfo */
    Relids        relids;            /* set of base relids (rangetable indexes) */

    /* size estimates generated by planner */
    double        rows;            /* estimated number of result tuples */

    /* per-relation planner control flags */
    bool        consider_startup;    /* keep cheap-startup-cost paths? */
    bool        consider_param_startup; /* ditto, for parameterized paths? */
    bool        consider_parallel;    /* consider parallel paths? */

    /* default result targetlist for Paths scanning this relation */
    struct PathTarget *reltarget;    /* list of Vars/Exprs, cost, width */

    /* materialization information */
    List       *pathlist;        /* Path structures */
    List       *ppilist;        /* ParamPathInfos used in pathlist */
    List       *partial_pathlist;    /* partial Paths */
    struct Path *cheapest_startup_path;
    struct Path *cheapest_total_path;
    struct Path *cheapest_unique_path;
    List       *cheapest_parameterized_paths;

    /* parameterization information needed for both base rels and join rels */
    /* (see also lateral_vars and lateral_referencers) */
    Relids        direct_lateral_relids;    /* rels directly laterally referenced */
    Relids        lateral_relids; /* minimum parameterization of rel */

    /* information about a base rel (not set for join rels!) */
    Index        relid;
    Oid            reltablespace;    /* containing tablespace */
    RTEKind        rtekind;        /* RELATION, SUBQUERY, or FUNCTION */
    AttrNumber    min_attr;        /* smallest attrno of rel (often <0) */
    AttrNumber    max_attr;        /* largest attrno of rel */
    Relids       *attr_needed;    /* array indexed [min_attr .. max_attr] */
    int32       *attr_widths;    /* array indexed [min_attr .. max_attr] */
    List       *lateral_vars;    /* LATERAL Vars and PHVs referenced by rel */
    Relids        lateral_referencers;    /* rels that reference me laterally */
    List       *indexlist;        /* list of IndexOptInfo */
    List       *statlist;        /* list of StatisticExtInfo */
    BlockNumber pages;            /* size estimates derived from pg_class */
    double        tuples;
    double        allvisfrac;
    PlannerInfo *subroot;        /* if subquery */
    List       *subplan_params; /* if subquery */
    int            rel_parallel_workers;    /* wanted number of parallel workers */

    /* Information about foreign tables and foreign joins */
    Oid            serverid;        /* identifies server for the table or join */
    Oid            userid;            /* identifies user to check access as */
    bool        useridiscurrent;    /* join is only valid for current user */
    /* use "struct FdwRoutine" to avoid including fdwapi.h here */
    struct FdwRoutine *fdwroutine;
    void       *fdw_private;

    /* cache space for remembering if we have proven this relation unique */
    List       *unique_for_rels;    /* known unique for these other relid
                                     * set(s) */
    List       *non_unique_for_rels;    /* known not unique for these set(s) */

    /* used by various scans and joins: */
    List       *baserestrictinfo;    /* RestrictInfo structures (if base rel) */
    QualCost    baserestrictcost;    /* cost of evaluating the above */
    Index        baserestrict_min_security;    /* min security_level found in
                                             * baserestrictinfo */
    List       *joininfo;        /* RestrictInfo structures for join clauses
                                 * involving this rel */
    bool        has_eclass_joins;    /* T means joininfo is incomplete */

    /* used by "other" relations */
    Relids        top_parent_relids;    /* Relids of topmost parents */

	/* used for partitioned relations */
	PartitionScheme part_scheme;    /* Partitioning scheme. */
	int         nparts;         /* number of partitions */
	struct PartitionBoundInfoData *boundinfo;   /* Partition bounds */
        List       *partition_qual; /* partition constraint */
	struct RelOptInfo **part_rels;  /* Array of RelOptInfos of partitions,
	                                * stored in the same order of bounds */
        List      **partexprs;      /* Non-nullable partition key expressions. */
        List      **nullable_partexprs; /* Nullable partition key expressions. */
        List       *partitioned_child_rels; /* List of RT indexes. */
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
	/* used for interval partition */
	bool		intervalparent;     /* is interval partition */
	bool		isdefault;			/* is default partition table */
	Bitmapset	*childs;            /* child tables to query */
	int 		estimate_partidx;   /* */

	/* used for complex delete */
	ResultRelLocation resultRelLoc;
#endif

} RelOptInfo;

/*
 * Is given relation partitioned?
 *
 * It's not enough to test whether rel->part_scheme is set, because it might
 * be that the basic partitioning properties of the input relations matched
 * but the partition bounds did not.
 *
 * We treat dummy relations as unpartitioned.  We could alternatively
 * treat them as partitioned, but it's not clear whether that's a useful thing
 * to do.
 */
#define IS_PARTITIONED_REL(rel) \
	((rel)->part_scheme && (rel)->boundinfo && (rel)->nparts > 0 && \
	 (rel)->part_rels && !(IS_DUMMY_REL(rel)))

/*
 * Convenience macro to make sure that a partitioned relation has all the
 * required members set.
 */
#define REL_HAS_ALL_PART_PROPS(rel)    \
   ((rel)->part_scheme && (rel)->boundinfo && (rel)->nparts > 0 && \
    (rel)->part_rels && (rel)->partexprs && (rel)->nullable_partexprs)


/*
 * IndexOptInfo
 *        Per-index information for planning/optimization
 *
 *        indexkeys[], indexcollations[], opfamily[], and opcintype[]
 *        each have ncolumns entries.
 *
 *        sortopfamily[], reverse_sort[], and nulls_first[] likewise have
 *        ncolumns entries, if the index is ordered; but if it is unordered,
 *        those pointers are NULL.
 *
 *        Zeroes in the indexkeys[] array indicate index columns that are
 *        expressions; there is one element in indexprs for each such column.
 *
 *        For an ordered index, reverse_sort[] and nulls_first[] describe the
 *        sort ordering of a forward indexscan; we can also consider a backward
 *        indexscan, which will generate the reverse ordering.
 *
 *        The indexprs and indpred expressions have been run through
 *        prepqual.c and eval_const_expressions() for ease of matching to
 *        WHERE clauses. indpred is in implicit-AND form.
 *
 *        indextlist is a TargetEntry list representing the index columns.
 *        It provides an equivalent base-relation Var for each simple column,
 *        and links to the matching indexprs element for each expression column.
 *
 *        While most of these fields are filled when the IndexOptInfo is created
 *        (by plancat.c), indrestrictinfo and predOK are set later, in
 *        check_index_predicates().
 */
typedef struct IndexOptInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Oid            indexoid;        /* OID of the index relation */
    Oid            reltablespace;    /* tablespace of index (not table) */
    RelOptInfo *rel;            /* back-link to index's table */

    /* index-size statistics (from pg_class and elsewhere) */
    BlockNumber pages;            /* number of disk pages in index */
    double        tuples;            /* number of index tuples in index */
    int            tree_height;    /* index tree height, or -1 if unknown */

    /* index descriptor information */
    int            ncolumns;        /* number of columns in index */
    int           *indexkeys;        /* column numbers of index's keys, or 0 */
    Oid           *indexcollations;    /* OIDs of collations of index columns */
    Oid           *opfamily;        /* OIDs of operator families for columns */
    Oid           *opcintype;        /* OIDs of opclass declared input data types */
    Oid           *sortopfamily;    /* OIDs of btree opfamilies, if orderable */
    bool       *reverse_sort;    /* is sort order descending? */
    bool       *nulls_first;    /* do NULLs come first in the sort order? */
    bool       *canreturn;        /* which index cols can be returned in an
                                 * index-only scan? */
    Oid            relam;            /* OID of the access method (in pg_am) */

    List       *indexprs;        /* expressions for non-simple index columns */
    List       *indpred;        /* predicate if a partial index, else NIL */

    List       *indextlist;        /* targetlist representing index columns */

    List       *indrestrictinfo;    /* parent relation's baserestrictinfo
                                     * list, less any conditions implied by
                                     * the index's predicate (unless it's a
                                     * target rel, see comments in
                                     * check_index_predicates()) */

    bool        predOK;            /* true if index predicate matches query */
    bool        unique;            /* true if a unique index */
    bool        immediate;        /* is uniqueness enforced immediately? */
    bool        hypothetical;    /* true if index doesn't really exist */

    /* Remaining fields are copied from the index AM's API struct: */
    bool        amcanorderbyop; /* does AM support order by operator result? */
    bool        amoptionalkey;    /* can query omit key for the first column? */
    bool        amsearcharray;    /* can AM handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals? */
    bool        amsearchnulls;    /* can AM search for NULL/NOT NULL entries? */
    bool        amhasgettuple;    /* does AM have amgettuple interface? */
    bool        amhasgetbitmap; /* does AM have amgetbitmap interface? */
    bool        amcanparallel;    /* does AM support parallel scan? */
    /* Rather than include amapi.h here, we declare amcostestimate like this */
    void        (*amcostestimate) ();    /* AM's cost estimator */
} IndexOptInfo;

/*
 * ForeignKeyOptInfo
 *        Per-foreign-key information for planning/optimization
 *
 * The per-FK-column arrays can be fixed-size because we allow at most
 * INDEX_MAX_KEYS columns in a foreign key constraint.  Each array has
 * nkeys valid entries.
 */
typedef struct ForeignKeyOptInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    /* Basic data about the foreign key (fetched from catalogs): */
    Index        con_relid;        /* RT index of the referencing table */
    Index        ref_relid;        /* RT index of the referenced table */
    int            nkeys;            /* number of columns in the foreign key */
    AttrNumber    conkey[INDEX_MAX_KEYS]; /* cols in referencing table */
    AttrNumber    confkey[INDEX_MAX_KEYS];    /* cols in referenced table */
    Oid            conpfeqop[INDEX_MAX_KEYS];    /* PK = FK operator OIDs */

    /* Derived info about whether FK's equality conditions match the query: */
    int            nmatched_ec;    /* # of FK cols matched by ECs */
    int            nmatched_rcols; /* # of FK cols matched by non-EC rinfos */
    int            nmatched_ri;    /* total # of non-EC rinfos matched to FK */
    /* Pointer to eclass matching each column's condition, if there is one */
    struct EquivalenceClass *eclass[INDEX_MAX_KEYS];
    /* List of non-EC RestrictInfos matching each column's condition */
    List       *rinfos[INDEX_MAX_KEYS];
} ForeignKeyOptInfo;

/*
 * StatisticExtInfo
 *        Information about extended statistics for planning/optimization
 *
 * Each pg_statistic_ext row is represented by one or more nodes of this
 * type, or even zero if ANALYZE has not computed them.
 */
typedef struct StatisticExtInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Oid            statOid;        /* OID of the statistics row */
    RelOptInfo *rel;            /* back-link to statistic's table */
    char        kind;            /* statistic kind of this entry */
    Bitmapset  *keys;            /* attnums of the columns covered */
} StatisticExtInfo;

/*
 * EquivalenceClasses
 *
 * Whenever we can determine that a mergejoinable equality clause A = B is
 * not delayed by any outer join, we create an EquivalenceClass containing
 * the expressions A and B to record this knowledge.  If we later find another
 * equivalence B = C, we add C to the existing EquivalenceClass; this may
 * require merging two existing EquivalenceClasses.  At the end of the qual
 * distribution process, we have sets of values that are known all transitively
 * equal to each other, where "equal" is according to the rules of the btree
 * operator family(s) shown in ec_opfamilies, as well as the collation shown
 * by ec_collation.  (We restrict an EC to contain only equalities whose
 * operators belong to the same set of opfamilies.  This could probably be
 * relaxed, but for now it's not worth the trouble, since nearly all equality
 * operators belong to only one btree opclass anyway.  Similarly, we suppose
 * that all or none of the input datatypes are collatable, so that a single
 * collation value is sufficient.)
 *
 * We also use EquivalenceClasses as the base structure for PathKeys, letting
 * us represent knowledge about different sort orderings being equivalent.
 * Since every PathKey must reference an EquivalenceClass, we will end up
 * with single-member EquivalenceClasses whenever a sort key expression has
 * not been equivalenced to anything else.  It is also possible that such an
 * EquivalenceClass will contain a volatile expression ("ORDER BY random()"),
 * which is a case that can't arise otherwise since clauses containing
 * volatile functions are never considered mergejoinable.  We mark such
 * EquivalenceClasses specially to prevent them from being merged with
 * ordinary EquivalenceClasses.  Also, for volatile expressions we have
 * to be careful to match the EquivalenceClass to the correct targetlist
 * entry: consider SELECT random() AS a, random() AS b ... ORDER BY b,a.
 * So we record the SortGroupRef of the originating sort clause.
 *
 * We allow equality clauses appearing below the nullable side of an outer join
 * to form EquivalenceClasses, but these have a slightly different meaning:
 * the included values might be all NULL rather than all the same non-null
 * values.  See src/backend/optimizer/README for more on that point.
 *
 * NB: if ec_merged isn't NULL, this class has been merged into another, and
 * should be ignored in favor of using the pointed-to class.
 */
typedef struct EquivalenceClass
{
    NodeTag        type;

    List       *ec_opfamilies;    /* btree operator family OIDs */
    Oid            ec_collation;    /* collation, if datatypes are collatable */
    List       *ec_members;        /* list of EquivalenceMembers */
    List       *ec_sources;        /* list of generating RestrictInfos */
    List       *ec_derives;        /* list of derived RestrictInfos */
    Relids        ec_relids;        /* all relids appearing in ec_members, except
                                 * for child members (see below) */
    bool        ec_has_const;    /* any pseudoconstants in ec_members? */
    bool        ec_has_volatile;    /* the (sole) member is a volatile expr */
    bool        ec_below_outer_join;    /* equivalence applies below an OJ */
    bool        ec_broken;        /* failed to generate needed clauses? */
    Index        ec_sortref;        /* originating sortclause label, or 0 */
    Index        ec_min_security;    /* minimum security_level in ec_sources */
    Index        ec_max_security;    /* maximum security_level in ec_sources */
    struct EquivalenceClass *ec_merged; /* set if merged into another EC */
} EquivalenceClass;

/*
 * If an EC contains a const and isn't below-outer-join, any PathKey depending
 * on it must be redundant, since there's only one possible value of the key.
 */
#define EC_MUST_BE_REDUNDANT(eclass)  \
    ((eclass)->ec_has_const && !(eclass)->ec_below_outer_join)

/*
 * EquivalenceMember - one member expression of an EquivalenceClass
 *
 * em_is_child signifies that this element was built by transposing a member
 * for an appendrel parent relation to represent the corresponding expression
 * for an appendrel child.  These members are used for determining the
 * pathkeys of scans on the child relation and for explicitly sorting the
 * child when necessary to build a MergeAppend path for the whole appendrel
 * tree.  An em_is_child member has no impact on the properties of the EC as a
 * whole; in particular the EC's ec_relids field does NOT include the child
 * relation.  An em_is_child member should never be marked em_is_const nor
 * cause ec_has_const or ec_has_volatile to be set, either.  Thus, em_is_child
 * members are not really full-fledged members of the EC, but just reflections
 * or doppelgangers of real members.  Most operations on EquivalenceClasses
 * should ignore em_is_child members, and those that don't should test
 * em_relids to make sure they only consider relevant members.
 *
 * em_datatype is usually the same as exprType(em_expr), but can be
 * different when dealing with a binary-compatible opfamily; in particular
 * anyarray_ops would never work without this.  Use em_datatype when
 * looking up a specific btree operator to work with this expression.
 */
typedef struct EquivalenceMember
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Expr       *em_expr;        /* the expression represented */
    Relids        em_relids;        /* all relids appearing in em_expr */
    Relids        em_nullable_relids; /* nullable by lower outer joins */
    bool        em_is_const;    /* expression is pseudoconstant? */
    bool        em_is_child;    /* derived version for a child relation? */
    Oid            em_datatype;    /* the "nominal type" used by the opfamily */
} EquivalenceMember;

/*
 * PathKeys
 *
 * The sort ordering of a path is represented by a list of PathKey nodes.
 * An empty list implies no known ordering.  Otherwise the first item
 * represents the primary sort key, the second the first secondary sort key,
 * etc.  The value being sorted is represented by linking to an
 * EquivalenceClass containing that value and including pk_opfamily among its
 * ec_opfamilies.  The EquivalenceClass tells which collation to use, too.
 * This is a convenient method because it makes it trivial to detect
 * equivalent and closely-related orderings. (See optimizer/README for more
 * information.)
 *
 * Note: pk_strategy is either BTLessStrategyNumber (for ASC) or
 * BTGreaterStrategyNumber (for DESC).  We assume that all ordering-capable
 * index types will use btree-compatible strategy numbers.
 */
typedef struct PathKey
{
    NodeTag        type;

    EquivalenceClass *pk_eclass;    /* the value that is ordered */
    Oid            pk_opfamily;    /* btree opfamily defining the ordering */
    int            pk_strategy;    /* sort direction (ASC or DESC) */
    bool        pk_nulls_first; /* do NULLs come before normal values? */
} PathKey;


/*
 * PathTarget
 *
 * This struct contains what we need to know during planning about the
 * targetlist (output columns) that a Path will compute.  Each RelOptInfo
 * includes a default PathTarget, which its individual Paths may simply
 * reference.  However, in some cases a Path may compute outputs different
 * from other Paths, and in that case we make a custom PathTarget for it.
 * For example, an indexscan might return index expressions that would
 * otherwise need to be explicitly calculated.  (Note also that "upper"
 * relations generally don't have useful default PathTargets.)
 *
 * exprs contains bare expressions; they do not have TargetEntry nodes on top,
 * though those will appear in finished Plans.
 *
 * sortgrouprefs[] is an array of the same length as exprs, containing the
 * corresponding sort/group refnos, or zeroes for expressions not referenced
 * by sort/group clauses.  If sortgrouprefs is NULL (which it generally is in
 * RelOptInfo.reltarget targets; only upper-level Paths contain this info),
 * we have not identified sort/group columns in this tlist.  This allows us to
 * deal with sort/group refnos when needed with less expense than including
 * TargetEntry nodes in the exprs list.
 */
typedef struct PathTarget
{
    NodeTag        type;
    List       *exprs;            /* list of expressions to be computed */
    Index       *sortgrouprefs;    /* corresponding sort/group refnos, or 0 */
    QualCost    cost;            /* cost of evaluating the expressions */
    int            width;            /* estimated avg width of result tuples */
} PathTarget;

/* Convenience macro to get a sort/group refno from a PathTarget */
#define get_pathtarget_sortgroupref(target, colno) \
    ((target)->sortgrouprefs ? (target)->sortgrouprefs[colno] : (Index) 0)


/*
 * ParamPathInfo
 *
 * All parameterized paths for a given relation with given required outer rels
 * link to a single ParamPathInfo, which stores common information such as
 * the estimated rowcount for this parameterization.  We do this partly to
 * avoid recalculations, but mostly to ensure that the estimated rowcount
 * is in fact the same for every such path.
 *
 * Note: ppi_clauses is only used in ParamPathInfos for base relation paths;
 * in join cases it's NIL because the set of relevant clauses varies depending
 * on how the join is formed.  The relevant clauses will appear in each
 * parameterized join path's joinrestrictinfo list, instead.
 */
typedef struct ParamPathInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Relids        ppi_req_outer;    /* rels supplying parameters used by path */
    double        ppi_rows;        /* estimated number of result tuples */
    List       *ppi_clauses;    /* join clauses available from outer rels */
} ParamPathInfo;


/*
 * Type "Path" is used as-is for sequential-scan paths, as well as some other
 * simple plan types that we don't need any extra information in the path for.
 * For other path types it is the first component of a larger struct.
 *
 * "pathtype" is the NodeTag of the Plan node we could build from this Path.
 * It is partially redundant with the Path's NodeTag, but allows us to use
 * the same Path type for multiple Plan types when there is no need to
 * distinguish the Plan type during path processing.
 *
 * "parent" identifies the relation this Path scans, and "pathtarget"
 * describes the precise set of output columns the Path would compute.
 * In simple cases all Paths for a given rel share the same targetlist,
 * which we represent by having path->pathtarget equal to parent->reltarget.
 *
 * "param_info", if not NULL, links to a ParamPathInfo that identifies outer
 * relation(s) that provide parameter values to each scan of this path.
 * That means this path can only be joined to those rels by means of nestloop
 * joins with this path on the inside.  Also note that a parameterized path
 * is responsible for testing all "movable" joinclauses involving this rel
 * and the specified outer rel(s).
 *
 * "rows" is the same as parent->rows in simple paths, but in parameterized
 * paths and UniquePaths it can be less than parent->rows, reflecting the
 * fact that we've filtered by extra join conditions or removed duplicates.
 *
 * "pathkeys" is a List of PathKey nodes (see above), describing the sort
 * ordering of the path's output rows.
 */
typedef struct Path
{
    NodeTag        type;

    NodeTag        pathtype;        /* tag identifying scan/join method */

    RelOptInfo *parent;            /* the relation this path can build */
    PathTarget *pathtarget;        /* list of Vars/Exprs, cost, width */

    ParamPathInfo *param_info;    /* parameterization info, or NULL if none */

    bool        parallel_aware; /* engage parallel-aware logic? */
    bool        parallel_safe;    /* OK to use as part of parallel plan? */
    int            parallel_workers;    /* desired # of workers; 0 = not parallel */

    /* estimated size/costs for path (see costsize.c for more info) */
    double        rows;            /* estimated number of result tuples */
    Cost        startup_cost;    /* cost expended before fetching any tuples */
    Cost        total_cost;        /* total cost (assuming all tuples fetched) */

    List       *pathkeys;        /* sort ordering of path's output */
    /* pathkeys is a List of PathKey nodes; see above */
#ifdef XCP
    Distribution *distribution;
#endif
} Path;

/* Macro for extracting a path's parameterization relids; beware double eval */
#define PATH_REQ_OUTER(path)  \
    ((path)->param_info ? (path)->param_info->ppi_req_outer : (Relids) NULL)

/*----------
 * IndexPath represents an index scan over a single index.
 *
 * This struct is used for both regular indexscans and index-only scans;
 * path.pathtype is T_IndexScan or T_IndexOnlyScan to show which is meant.
 *
 * 'indexinfo' is the index to be scanned.
 *
 * 'indexclauses' is a list of index qualification clauses, with implicit
 * AND semantics across the list.  Each clause is a RestrictInfo node from
 * the query's WHERE or JOIN conditions.  An empty list implies a full
 * index scan.
 *
 * 'indexquals' has the same structure as 'indexclauses', but it contains
 * the actual index qual conditions that can be used with the index.
 * In simple cases this is identical to 'indexclauses', but when special
 * indexable operators appear in 'indexclauses', they are replaced by the
 * derived indexscannable conditions in 'indexquals'.
 *
 * 'indexqualcols' is an integer list of index column numbers (zero-based)
 * of the same length as 'indexquals', showing which index column each qual
 * is meant to be used with.  'indexquals' is required to be ordered by
 * index column, so 'indexqualcols' must form a nondecreasing sequence.
 * (The order of multiple quals for the same index column is unspecified.)
 *
 * 'indexorderbys', if not NIL, is a list of ORDER BY expressions that have
 * been found to be usable as ordering operators for an amcanorderbyop index.
 * The list must match the path's pathkeys, ie, one expression per pathkey
 * in the same order.  These are not RestrictInfos, just bare expressions,
 * since they generally won't yield booleans.  Also, unlike the case for
 * quals, it's guaranteed that each expression has the index key on the left
 * side of the operator.
 *
 * 'indexorderbycols' is an integer list of index column numbers (zero-based)
 * of the same length as 'indexorderbys', showing which index column each
 * ORDER BY expression is meant to be used with.  (There is no restriction
 * on which index column each ORDER BY can be used with.)
 *
 * 'indexscandir' is one of:
 *        ForwardScanDirection: forward scan of an ordered index
 *        BackwardScanDirection: backward scan of an ordered index
 *        NoMovementScanDirection: scan of an unordered index, or don't care
 * (The executor doesn't care whether it gets ForwardScanDirection or
 * NoMovementScanDirection for an indexscan, but the planner wants to
 * distinguish ordered from unordered indexes for building pathkeys.)
 *
 * 'indextotalcost' and 'indexselectivity' are saved in the IndexPath so that
 * we need not recompute them when considering using the same index in a
 * bitmap index/heap scan (see BitmapHeapPath).  The costs of the IndexPath
 * itself represent the costs of an IndexScan or IndexOnlyScan plan type.
 *----------
 */
typedef struct IndexPath
{
    Path        path;
    IndexOptInfo *indexinfo;
    List       *indexclauses;
    List       *indexquals;
    List       *indexqualcols;
    List       *indexorderbys;
    List       *indexorderbycols;
    ScanDirection indexscandir;
    Cost        indextotalcost;
    Selectivity indexselectivity;
} IndexPath;

/*
 * BitmapHeapPath represents one or more indexscans that generate TID bitmaps
 * instead of directly accessing the heap, followed by AND/OR combinations
 * to produce a single bitmap, followed by a heap scan that uses the bitmap.
 * Note that the output is always considered unordered, since it will come
 * out in physical heap order no matter what the underlying indexes did.
 *
 * The individual indexscans are represented by IndexPath nodes, and any
 * logic on top of them is represented by a tree of BitmapAndPath and
 * BitmapOrPath nodes.  Notice that we can use the same IndexPath node both
 * to represent a regular (or index-only) index scan plan, and as the child
 * of a BitmapHeapPath that represents scanning the same index using a
 * BitmapIndexScan.  The startup_cost and total_cost figures of an IndexPath
 * always represent the costs to use it as a regular (or index-only)
 * IndexScan.  The costs of a BitmapIndexScan can be computed using the
 * IndexPath's indextotalcost and indexselectivity.
 */
typedef struct BitmapHeapPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *bitmapqual;        /* IndexPath, BitmapAndPath, BitmapOrPath */
} BitmapHeapPath;

/*
 * BitmapAndPath represents a BitmapAnd plan node; it can only appear as
 * part of the substructure of a BitmapHeapPath.  The Path structure is
 * a bit more heavyweight than we really need for this, but for simplicity
 * we make it a derivative of Path anyway.
 */
typedef struct BitmapAndPath
{
    Path        path;
    List       *bitmapquals;    /* IndexPaths and BitmapOrPaths */
    Selectivity bitmapselectivity;
} BitmapAndPath;

/*
 * BitmapOrPath represents a BitmapOr plan node; it can only appear as
 * part of the substructure of a BitmapHeapPath.  The Path structure is
 * a bit more heavyweight than we really need for this, but for simplicity
 * we make it a derivative of Path anyway.
 */
typedef struct BitmapOrPath
{
    Path        path;
    List       *bitmapquals;    /* IndexPaths and BitmapAndPaths */
    Selectivity bitmapselectivity;
} BitmapOrPath;

/*
 * TidPath represents a scan by TID
 *
 * tidquals is an implicitly OR'ed list of qual expressions of the form
 * "CTID = pseudoconstant" or "CTID = ANY(pseudoconstant_array)".
 * Note they are bare expressions, not RestrictInfos.
 */
typedef struct TidPath
{
    Path        path;
    List       *tidquals;        /* qual(s) involving CTID = something */
} TidPath;

/*
 * SubqueryScanPath represents a scan of an unflattened subquery-in-FROM
 *
 * Note that the subpath comes from a different planning domain; for example
 * RTE indexes within it mean something different from those known to the
 * SubqueryScanPath.  path.parent->subroot is the planning context needed to
 * interpret the subpath.
 */
typedef struct SubqueryScanPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing subquery execution */
} SubqueryScanPath;

/*
 * ForeignPath represents a potential scan of a foreign table, foreign join
 * or foreign upper-relation.
 *
 * fdw_private stores FDW private data about the scan.  While fdw_private is
 * not actually touched by the core code during normal operations, it's
 * generally a good idea to use a representation that can be dumped by
 * nodeToString(), so that you can examine the structure during debugging
 * with tools like pprint().
 */
typedef struct ForeignPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *fdw_outerpath;
    List       *fdw_private;
} ForeignPath;

/*
 * CustomPath represents a table scan done by some out-of-core extension.
 *
 * We provide a set of hooks here - which the provider must take care to set
 * up correctly - to allow extensions to supply their own methods of scanning
 * a relation.  For example, a provider might provide GPU acceleration, a
 * cache-based scan, or some other kind of logic we haven't dreamed up yet.
 *
 * CustomPaths can be injected into the planning process for a relation by
 * set_rel_pathlist_hook functions.
 *
 * Core code must avoid assuming that the CustomPath is only as large as
 * the structure declared here; providers are allowed to make it the first
 * element in a larger structure.  (Since the planner never copies Paths,
 * this doesn't add any complication.)  However, for consistency with the
 * FDW case, we provide a "custom_private" field in CustomPath; providers
 * may prefer to use that rather than define another struct type.
 */

struct CustomPathMethods;

typedef struct CustomPath
{
    Path        path;
    uint32        flags;            /* mask of CUSTOMPATH_* flags, see
                                 * nodes/extensible.h */
    List       *custom_paths;    /* list of child Path nodes, if any */
    List       *custom_private;
    const struct CustomPathMethods *methods;
} CustomPath;

/*
 * AppendPath represents an Append plan, ie, successive execution of
 * several member plans.
 *
 * Note: it is possible for "subpaths" to contain only one, or even no,
 * elements.  These cases are optimized during create_append_plan.
 * In particular, an AppendPath with no subpaths is a "dummy" path that
 * is created to represent the case that a relation is provably empty.
 */
typedef struct AppendPath
{
    Path        path;
    /* RT indexes of non-leaf tables in a partition tree */
    List       *partitioned_rels;
    List       *subpaths;        /* list of component Paths */
} AppendPath;

#define IS_DUMMY_PATH(p) \
    (IsA((p), AppendPath) && ((AppendPath *) (p))->subpaths == NIL)

/* A relation that's been proven empty will have one path that is dummy */
#define IS_DUMMY_REL(r) \
    ((r)->cheapest_total_path != NULL && \
     IS_DUMMY_PATH((r)->cheapest_total_path))

/*
 * MergeAppendPath represents a MergeAppend plan, ie, the merging of sorted
 * results from several member plans to produce similarly-sorted output.
 */
typedef struct MergeAppendPath
{
    Path        path;
    /* RT indexes of non-leaf tables in a partition tree */
    List       *partitioned_rels;
    List       *subpaths;        /* list of component Paths */
    double        limit_tuples;    /* hard limit on output tuples, or -1 */
} MergeAppendPath;

/*
 * ResultPath represents use of a Result plan node to compute a variable-free
 * targetlist with no underlying tables (a "SELECT expressions" query).
 * The query could have a WHERE clause, too, represented by "quals".
 *
 * Note that quals is a list of bare clauses, not RestrictInfos.
 */
typedef struct ResultPath
{
    Path        path;
    List       *quals;
} ResultPath;

/*
 * MaterialPath represents use of a Material plan node, i.e., caching of
 * the output of its subpath.  This is used when the subpath is expensive
 * and needs to be scanned repeatedly, or when we need mark/restore ability
 * and the subpath doesn't have it.
 */
typedef struct MaterialPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;
} MaterialPath;

/*
 * UniquePath represents elimination of distinct rows from the output of
 * its subpath.
 *
 * This can represent significantly different plans: either hash-based or
 * sort-based implementation, or a no-op if the input path can be proven
 * distinct already.  The decision is sufficiently localized that it's not
 * worth having separate Path node types.  (Note: in the no-op case, we could
 * eliminate the UniquePath node entirely and just return the subpath; but
 * it's convenient to have a UniquePath in the path tree to signal upper-level
 * routines that the input is known distinct.)
 */
typedef enum
{
    UNIQUE_PATH_NOOP,            /* input is known unique already */
    UNIQUE_PATH_HASH,            /* use hashing */
    UNIQUE_PATH_SORT            /* use sorting */
} UniquePathMethod;

typedef struct UniquePath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;
    UniquePathMethod umethod;
    List       *in_operators;    /* equality operators of the IN clause */
    List       *uniq_exprs;        /* expressions to be made unique */
} UniquePath;

#ifdef XCP
typedef struct RemoteSubPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;
} RemoteSubPath;
#endif

/*
 * GatherPath runs several copies of a plan in parallel and collects the
 * results.  The parallel leader may also execute the plan, unless the
 * single_copy flag is set.
 */
typedef struct GatherPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path for each worker */
    bool        single_copy;    /* don't execute path more than once */
    int            num_workers;    /* number of workers sought to help */
} GatherPath;

/*
 * GatherMergePath runs several copies of a plan in parallel and
 * collects the results. For gather merge parallel leader always execute the
 * plan.
 */
typedef struct GatherMergePath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path for each worker */
    int            num_workers;    /* number of workers sought to help */
} GatherMergePath;


/*
 * All join-type paths share these fields.
 */

typedef struct JoinPath
{
    Path        path;

    JoinType    jointype;

    bool        inner_unique;    /* each outer tuple provably matches no more
                                 * than one inner tuple */

    Path       *outerjoinpath;    /* path for the outer side of the join */
    Path       *innerjoinpath;    /* path for the inner side of the join */

    List       *joinrestrictinfo;    /* RestrictInfos to apply to join */

#ifdef XCP
    List       *movedrestrictinfo;        /* RestrictInfos moved down to inner path */
#endif

    /*
     * See the notes for RelOptInfo and ParamPathInfo to understand why
     * joinrestrictinfo is needed in JoinPath, and can't be merged into the
     * parent RelOptInfo.
     */
} JoinPath;

/*
 * A nested-loop path needs no special fields.
 */

typedef JoinPath NestPath;

/*
 * A mergejoin path has these fields.
 *
 * Unlike other path types, a MergePath node doesn't represent just a single
 * run-time plan node: it can represent up to four.  Aside from the MergeJoin
 * node itself, there can be a Sort node for the outer input, a Sort node
 * for the inner input, and/or a Material node for the inner input.  We could
 * represent these nodes by separate path nodes, but considering how many
 * different merge paths are investigated during a complex join problem,
 * it seems better to avoid unnecessary palloc overhead.
 *
 * path_mergeclauses lists the clauses (in the form of RestrictInfos)
 * that will be used in the merge.
 *
 * Note that the mergeclauses are a subset of the parent relation's
 * restriction-clause list.  Any join clauses that are not mergejoinable
 * appear only in the parent's restrict list, and must be checked by a
 * qpqual at execution time.
 *
 * outersortkeys (resp. innersortkeys) is NIL if the outer path
 * (resp. inner path) is already ordered appropriately for the
 * mergejoin.  If it is not NIL then it is a PathKeys list describing
 * the ordering that must be created by an explicit Sort node.
 *
 * skip_mark_restore is TRUE if the executor need not do mark/restore calls.
 * Mark/restore overhead is usually required, but can be skipped if we know
 * that the executor need find only one match per outer tuple, and that the
 * mergeclauses are sufficient to identify a match.  In such cases the
 * executor can immediately advance the outer relation after processing a
 * match, and therefoere it need never back up the inner relation.
 *
 * materialize_inner is TRUE if a Material node should be placed atop the
 * inner input.  This may appear with or without an inner Sort step.
 */

typedef struct MergePath
{
    JoinPath    jpath;
    List       *path_mergeclauses;    /* join clauses to be used for merge */
    List       *outersortkeys;    /* keys for explicit sort, if any */
    List       *innersortkeys;    /* keys for explicit sort, if any */
    bool        skip_mark_restore;    /* can executor skip mark/restore? */
    bool        materialize_inner;    /* add Materialize to inner? */
} MergePath;

/*
 * A hashjoin path has these fields.
 *
 * The remarks above for mergeclauses apply for hashclauses as well.
 *
 * Hashjoin does not care what order its inputs appear in, so we have
 * no need for sortkeys.
 */

typedef struct HashPath
{
    JoinPath    jpath;
    List       *path_hashclauses;    /* join clauses used for hashing */
    int            num_batches;    /* number of batches expected */
} HashPath;

/*
 * ProjectionPath represents a projection (that is, targetlist computation)
 *
 * Nominally, this path node represents using a Result plan node to do a
 * projection step.  However, if the input plan node supports projection,
 * we can just modify its output targetlist to do the required calculations
 * directly, and not need a Result.  In some places in the planner we can just
 * jam the desired PathTarget into the input path node (and adjust its cost
 * accordingly), so we don't need a ProjectionPath.  But in other places
 * it's necessary to not modify the input path node, so we need a separate
 * ProjectionPath node, which is marked dummy to indicate that we intend to
 * assign the work to the input plan node.  The estimated cost for the
 * ProjectionPath node will account for whether a Result will be used or not.
 */
typedef struct ProjectionPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    bool        dummypp;        /* true if no separate Result is needed */
} ProjectionPath;

typedef struct QualPath
{
	Path        path;
	Path       *subpath;
	List       *quals;
} QualPath;

/*
 * ProjectSetPath represents evaluation of a targetlist that includes
 * set-returning function(s), which will need to be implemented by a
 * ProjectSet plan node.
 */
typedef struct ProjectSetPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
} ProjectSetPath;

/*
 * SortPath represents an explicit sort step
 *
 * The sort keys are, by definition, the same as path.pathkeys.
 *
 * Note: the Sort plan node cannot project, so path.pathtarget must be the
 * same as the input's pathtarget.
 */
typedef struct SortPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
} SortPath;

/*
 * GroupPath represents grouping (of presorted input)
 *
 * groupClause represents the columns to be grouped on; the input path
 * must be at least that well sorted.
 *
 * We can also apply a qual to the grouped rows (equivalent of HAVING)
 */
typedef struct GroupPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    List       *groupClause;    /* a list of SortGroupClause's */
    List       *qual;            /* quals (HAVING quals), if any */
} GroupPath;

/*
 * UpperUniquePath represents adjacent-duplicate removal (in presorted input)
 *
 * The columns to be compared are the first numkeys columns of the path's
 * pathkeys.  The input is presumed already sorted that way.
 */
typedef struct UpperUniquePath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    int            numkeys;        /* number of pathkey columns to compare */
} UpperUniquePath;

/*
 * AggPath represents generic computation of aggregate functions
 *
 * This may involve plain grouping (but not grouping sets), using either
 * sorted or hashed grouping; for the AGG_SORTED case, the input must be
 * appropriately presorted.
 */
typedef struct AggPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    AggStrategy aggstrategy;    /* basic strategy, see nodes.h */
    AggSplit    aggsplit;        /* agg-splitting mode, see nodes.h */
    double        numGroups;        /* estimated number of groups in input */
    List       *groupClause;    /* a list of SortGroupClause's */
    List       *qual;            /* quals (HAVING quals), if any */
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
	uint32      entrySize;
	bool        hybrid;
	bool        noDistinct;     /* no need of distinct related initialization */
#endif
} AggPath;

/*
 * Various annotations used for grouping sets in the planner.
 */

typedef struct GroupingSetData
{
    NodeTag        type;
    List       *set;            /* grouping set as list of sortgrouprefs */
    double        numGroups;        /* est. number of result groups */
} GroupingSetData;

typedef struct RollupData
{
    NodeTag        type;
    List       *groupClause;    /* applicable subset of parse->groupClause */
    List       *gsets;            /* lists of integer indexes into groupClause */
    List       *gsets_data;        /* list of GroupingSetData */
    double        numGroups;        /* est. number of result groups */
    bool        hashable;        /* can be hashed */
    bool        is_hashed;        /* to be implemented as a hashagg */
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
	uint32      entrySize;
#endif
} RollupData;

/*
 * GroupingSetsPath represents a GROUPING SETS aggregation
 */

typedef struct GroupingSetsPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    AggStrategy aggstrategy;    /* basic strategy */
    List       *rollups;        /* list of RollupData */
    List       *qual;            /* quals (HAVING quals), if any */
} GroupingSetsPath;

/*
 * MinMaxAggPath represents computation of MIN/MAX aggregates from indexes
 */
typedef struct MinMaxAggPath
{
    Path        path;
    List       *mmaggregates;    /* list of MinMaxAggInfo */
    List       *quals;            /* HAVING quals, if any */
} MinMaxAggPath;

/*
 * WindowAggPath represents generic computation of window functions
 *
 * Note: winpathkeys is separate from path.pathkeys because the actual sort
 * order might be an extension of winpathkeys; but createplan.c needs to
 * know exactly how many pathkeys match the window clause.
 */
typedef struct WindowAggPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    WindowClause *winclause;    /* WindowClause we'll be using */
    List       *winpathkeys;    /* PathKeys for PARTITION keys + ORDER keys */
} WindowAggPath;

/*
 * SetOpPath represents a set-operation, that is INTERSECT or EXCEPT
 */
typedef struct SetOpPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    SetOpCmd    cmd;            /* what to do, see nodes.h */
    SetOpStrategy strategy;        /* how to do it, see nodes.h */
    List       *distinctList;    /* SortGroupClauses identifying target cols */
    AttrNumber    flagColIdx;        /* where is the flag column, if any */
    int            firstFlag;        /* flag value for first input relation */
    double        numGroups;        /* estimated number of groups in input */
} SetOpPath;

/*
 * RecursiveUnionPath represents a recursive UNION node
 */
typedef struct RecursiveUnionPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *leftpath;        /* paths representing input sources */
    Path       *rightpath;
    List       *distinctList;    /* SortGroupClauses identifying target cols */
    int            wtParam;        /* ID of Param representing work table */
    double        numGroups;        /* estimated number of groups in input */
} RecursiveUnionPath;

/*
 * LockRowsPath represents acquiring row locks for SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE
 */
typedef struct LockRowsPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    List       *rowMarks;        /* a list of PlanRowMark's */
    int            epqParam;        /* ID of Param for EvalPlanQual re-eval */
} LockRowsPath;

/*
 * ModifyTablePath represents performing INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE modifications
 *
 * We represent most things that will be in the ModifyTable plan node
 * literally, except we have child Path(s) not Plan(s).  But analysis of the
 * OnConflictExpr is deferred to createplan.c, as is collection of FDW data.
 */
typedef struct ModifyTablePath
{
    Path        path;
    CmdType        operation;        /* INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE */
    bool        canSetTag;        /* do we set the command tag/es_processed? */
    Index        nominalRelation;    /* Parent RT index for use of EXPLAIN */
    /* RT indexes of non-leaf tables in a partition tree */
    List       *partitioned_rels;
	bool		partColsUpdated;	/* some part key in hierarchy updated */
    List       *resultRelations;    /* integer list of RT indexes */
    List       *subpaths;        /* Path(s) producing source data */
    List       *subroots;        /* per-target-table PlannerInfos */
    List       *withCheckOptionLists;    /* per-target-table WCO lists */
    List       *returningLists; /* per-target-table RETURNING tlists */
    List       *rowMarks;        /* PlanRowMarks (non-locking only) */
    OnConflictExpr *onconflict; /* ON CONFLICT clause, or NULL */
    int            epqParam;        /* ID of Param for EvalPlanQual re-eval */
} ModifyTablePath;

/*
 * LimitPath represents applying LIMIT/OFFSET restrictions
 */
typedef struct LimitPath
{
    Path        path;
    Path       *subpath;        /* path representing input source */
    Node       *limitOffset;    /* OFFSET parameter, or NULL if none */
    Node       *limitCount;        /* COUNT parameter, or NULL if none */
#ifdef __OPENTENBASE__
	bool		skipEarlyFinish;	/* Early ExecFinishNode ? */
#endif
} LimitPath;


/*
 * Restriction clause info.
 *
 * We create one of these for each AND sub-clause of a restriction condition
 * (WHERE or JOIN/ON clause).  Since the restriction clauses are logically
 * ANDed, we can use any one of them or any subset of them to filter out
 * tuples, without having to evaluate the rest.  The RestrictInfo node itself
 * stores data used by the optimizer while choosing the best query plan.
 *
 * If a restriction clause references a single base relation, it will appear
 * in the baserestrictinfo list of the RelOptInfo for that base rel.
 *
 * If a restriction clause references more than one base rel, it will
 * appear in the joininfo list of every RelOptInfo that describes a strict
 * subset of the base rels mentioned in the clause.  The joininfo lists are
 * used to drive join tree building by selecting plausible join candidates.
 * The clause cannot actually be applied until we have built a join rel
 * containing all the base rels it references, however.
 *
 * When we construct a join rel that includes all the base rels referenced
 * in a multi-relation restriction clause, we place that clause into the
 * joinrestrictinfo lists of paths for the join rel, if neither left nor
 * right sub-path includes all base rels referenced in the clause.  The clause
 * will be applied at that join level, and will not propagate any further up
 * the join tree.  (Note: the "predicate migration" code was once intended to
 * push restriction clauses up and down the plan tree based on evaluation
 * costs, but it's dead code and is unlikely to be resurrected in the
 * foreseeable future.)
 *
 * Note that in the presence of more than two rels, a multi-rel restriction
 * might reach different heights in the join tree depending on the join
 * sequence we use.  So, these clauses cannot be associated directly with
 * the join RelOptInfo, but must be kept track of on a per-join-path basis.
 *
 * RestrictInfos that represent equivalence conditions (i.e., mergejoinable
 * equalities that are not outerjoin-delayed) are handled a bit differently.
 * Initially we attach them to the EquivalenceClasses that are derived from
 * them.  When we construct a scan or join path, we look through all the
 * EquivalenceClasses and generate derived RestrictInfos representing the
 * minimal set of conditions that need to be checked for this particular scan
 * or join to enforce that all members of each EquivalenceClass are in fact
 * equal in all rows emitted by the scan or join.
 *
 * When dealing with outer joins we have to be very careful about pushing qual
 * clauses up and down the tree.  An outer join's own JOIN/ON conditions must
 * be evaluated exactly at that join node, unless they are "degenerate"
 * conditions that reference only Vars from the nullable side of the join.
 * Quals appearing in WHERE or in a JOIN above the outer join cannot be pushed
 * down below the outer join, if they reference any nullable Vars.
 * RestrictInfo nodes contain a flag to indicate whether a qual has been
 * pushed down to a lower level than its original syntactic placement in the
 * join tree would suggest.  If an outer join prevents us from pushing a qual
 * down to its "natural" semantic level (the level associated with just the
 * base rels used in the qual) then we mark the qual with a "required_relids"
 * value including more than just the base rels it actually uses.  By
 * pretending that the qual references all the rels required to form the outer
 * join, we prevent it from being evaluated below the outer join's joinrel.
 * When we do form the outer join's joinrel, we still need to distinguish
 * those quals that are actually in that join's JOIN/ON condition from those
 * that appeared elsewhere in the tree and were pushed down to the join rel
 * because they used no other rels.  That's what the is_pushed_down flag is
 * for; it tells us that a qual is not an OUTER JOIN qual for the set of base
 * rels listed in required_relids.  A clause that originally came from WHERE
 * or an INNER JOIN condition will *always* have its is_pushed_down flag set.
 * It's possible for an OUTER JOIN clause to be marked is_pushed_down too,
 * if we decide that it can be pushed down into the nullable side of the join.
 * In that case it acts as a plain filter qual for wherever it gets evaluated.
 * (In short, is_pushed_down is only false for non-degenerate outer join
 * conditions.  Possibly we should rename it to reflect that meaning?)
 *
 * RestrictInfo nodes also contain an outerjoin_delayed flag, which is true
 * if the clause's applicability must be delayed due to any outer joins
 * appearing below it (ie, it has to be postponed to some join level higher
 * than the set of relations it actually references).
 *
 * There is also an outer_relids field, which is NULL except for outer join
 * clauses; for those, it is the set of relids on the outer side of the
 * clause's outer join.  (These are rels that the clause cannot be applied to
 * in parameterized scans, since pushing it into the join's outer side would
 * lead to wrong answers.)
 *
 * There is also a nullable_relids field, which is the set of rels the clause
 * references that can be forced null by some outer join below the clause.
 *
 * outerjoin_delayed = true is subtly different from nullable_relids != NULL:
 * a clause might reference some nullable rels and yet not be
 * outerjoin_delayed because it also references all the other rels of the
 * outer join(s). A clause that is not outerjoin_delayed can be enforced
 * anywhere it is computable.
 *
 * To handle security-barrier conditions efficiently, we mark RestrictInfo
 * nodes with a security_level field, in which higher values identify clauses
 * coming from less-trusted sources.  The exact semantics are that a clause
 * cannot be evaluated before another clause with a lower security_level value
 * unless the first clause is leakproof.  As with outer-join clauses, this
 * creates a reason for clauses to sometimes need to be evaluated higher in
 * the join tree than their contents would suggest; and even at a single plan
 * node, this rule constrains the order of application of clauses.
 *
 * In general, the referenced clause might be arbitrarily complex.  The
 * kinds of clauses we can handle as indexscan quals, mergejoin clauses,
 * or hashjoin clauses are limited (e.g., no volatile functions).  The code
 * for each kind of path is responsible for identifying the restrict clauses
 * it can use and ignoring the rest.  Clauses not implemented by an indexscan,
 * mergejoin, or hashjoin will be placed in the plan qual or joinqual field
 * of the finished Plan node, where they will be enforced by general-purpose
 * qual-expression-evaluation code.  (But we are still entitled to count
 * their selectivity when estimating the result tuple count, if we
 * can guess what it is...)
 *
 * When the referenced clause is an OR clause, we generate a modified copy
 * in which additional RestrictInfo nodes are inserted below the top-level
 * OR/AND structure.  This is a convenience for OR indexscan processing:
 * indexquals taken from either the top level or an OR subclause will have
 * associated RestrictInfo nodes.
 *
 * The can_join flag is set true if the clause looks potentially useful as
 * a merge or hash join clause, that is if it is a binary opclause with
 * nonoverlapping sets of relids referenced in the left and right sides.
 * (Whether the operator is actually merge or hash joinable isn't checked,
 * however.)
 *
 * The pseudoconstant flag is set true if the clause contains no Vars of
 * the current query level and no volatile functions.  Such a clause can be
 * pulled out and used as a one-time qual in a gating Result node.  We keep
 * pseudoconstant clauses in the same lists as other RestrictInfos so that
 * the regular clause-pushing machinery can assign them to the correct join
 * level, but they need to be treated specially for cost and selectivity
 * estimates.  Note that a pseudoconstant clause can never be an indexqual
 * or merge or hash join clause, so it's of no interest to large parts of
 * the planner.
 *
 * When join clauses are generated from EquivalenceClasses, there may be
 * several equally valid ways to enforce join equivalence, of which we need
 * apply only one.  We mark clauses of this kind by setting parent_ec to
 * point to the generating EquivalenceClass.  Multiple clauses with the same
 * parent_ec in the same join are redundant.
 */

typedef struct RestrictInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Expr       *clause;            /* the represented clause of WHERE or JOIN */

    bool        is_pushed_down; /* TRUE if clause was pushed down in level */

    bool        outerjoin_delayed;    /* TRUE if delayed by lower outer join */

    bool        can_join;        /* see comment above */

    bool        pseudoconstant; /* see comment above */

    bool        leakproof;        /* TRUE if known to contain no leaked Vars */

    Index        security_level; /* see comment above */

    /* The set of relids (varnos) actually referenced in the clause: */
    Relids        clause_relids;

    /* The set of relids required to evaluate the clause: */
    Relids        required_relids;

    /* If an outer-join clause, the outer-side relations, else NULL: */
    Relids        outer_relids;

    /* The relids used in the clause that are nullable by lower outer joins: */
    Relids        nullable_relids;

    /* These fields are set for any binary opclause: */
    Relids        left_relids;    /* relids in left side of clause */
    Relids        right_relids;    /* relids in right side of clause */

    /* This field is NULL unless clause is an OR clause: */
    Expr       *orclause;        /* modified clause with RestrictInfos */

    /* This field is NULL unless clause is potentially redundant: */
    EquivalenceClass *parent_ec;    /* generating EquivalenceClass */

    /* cache space for cost and selectivity */
    QualCost    eval_cost;        /* eval cost of clause; -1 if not yet set */
    Selectivity norm_selec;        /* selectivity for "normal" (JOIN_INNER)
                                 * semantics; -1 if not yet set; >1 means a
                                 * redundant clause */
    Selectivity outer_selec;    /* selectivity for outer join semantics; -1 if
                                 * not yet set */

    /* valid if clause is mergejoinable, else NIL */
    List       *mergeopfamilies;    /* opfamilies containing clause operator */

    /* cache space for mergeclause processing; NULL if not yet set */
    EquivalenceClass *left_ec;    /* EquivalenceClass containing lefthand */
    EquivalenceClass *right_ec; /* EquivalenceClass containing righthand */
    EquivalenceMember *left_em; /* EquivalenceMember for lefthand */
    EquivalenceMember *right_em;    /* EquivalenceMember for righthand */
    List       *scansel_cache;    /* list of MergeScanSelCache structs */

    /* transient workspace for use while considering a specific join path */
    bool        outer_is_left;    /* T = outer var on left, F = on right */

    /* valid if clause is hashjoinable, else InvalidOid: */
    Oid            hashjoinoperator;    /* copy of clause operator */

    /* cache space for hashclause processing; -1 if not yet set */
    Selectivity left_bucketsize;    /* avg bucketsize of left side */
    Selectivity right_bucketsize;    /* avg bucketsize of right side */
} RestrictInfo;

/*
 * Since mergejoinscansel() is a relatively expensive function, and would
 * otherwise be invoked many times while planning a large join tree,
 * we go out of our way to cache its results.  Each mergejoinable
 * RestrictInfo carries a list of the specific sort orderings that have
 * been considered for use with it, and the resulting selectivities.
 */
typedef struct MergeScanSelCache
{
    /* Ordering details (cache lookup key) */
    Oid            opfamily;        /* btree opfamily defining the ordering */
    Oid            collation;        /* collation for the ordering */
    int            strategy;        /* sort direction (ASC or DESC) */
    bool        nulls_first;    /* do NULLs come before normal values? */
    /* Results */
    Selectivity leftstartsel;    /* first-join fraction for clause left side */
    Selectivity leftendsel;        /* last-join fraction for clause left side */
    Selectivity rightstartsel;    /* first-join fraction for clause right side */
    Selectivity rightendsel;    /* last-join fraction for clause right side */
} MergeScanSelCache;

/*
 * Placeholder node for an expression to be evaluated below the top level
 * of a plan tree.  This is used during planning to represent the contained
 * expression.  At the end of the planning process it is replaced by either
 * the contained expression or a Var referring to a lower-level evaluation of
 * the contained expression.  Typically the evaluation occurs below an outer
 * join, and Var references above the outer join might thereby yield NULL
 * instead of the expression value.
 *
 * Although the planner treats this as an expression node type, it is not
 * recognized by the parser or executor, so we declare it here rather than
 * in primnodes.h.
 */

typedef struct PlaceHolderVar
{
    Expr        xpr;
    Expr       *phexpr;            /* the represented expression */
    Relids        phrels;            /* base relids syntactically within expr src */
    Index        phid;            /* ID for PHV (unique within planner run) */
    Index        phlevelsup;        /* > 0 if PHV belongs to outer query */
} PlaceHolderVar;

/*
 * "Special join" info.
 *
 * One-sided outer joins constrain the order of joining partially but not
 * completely.  We flatten such joins into the planner's top-level list of
 * relations to join, but record information about each outer join in a
 * SpecialJoinInfo struct.  These structs are kept in the PlannerInfo node's
 * join_info_list.
 *
 * Similarly, semijoins and antijoins created by flattening IN (subselect)
 * and EXISTS(subselect) clauses create partial constraints on join order.
 * These are likewise recorded in SpecialJoinInfo structs.
 *
 * We make SpecialJoinInfos for FULL JOINs even though there is no flexibility
 * of planning for them, because this simplifies make_join_rel()'s API.
 *
 * min_lefthand and min_righthand are the sets of base relids that must be
 * available on each side when performing the special join.  lhs_strict is
 * true if the special join's condition cannot succeed when the LHS variables
 * are all NULL (this means that an outer join can commute with upper-level
 * outer joins even if it appears in their RHS).  We don't bother to set
 * lhs_strict for FULL JOINs, however.
 *
 * It is not valid for either min_lefthand or min_righthand to be empty sets;
 * if they were, this would break the logic that enforces join order.
 *
 * syn_lefthand and syn_righthand are the sets of base relids that are
 * syntactically below this special join.  (These are needed to help compute
 * min_lefthand and min_righthand for higher joins.)
 *
 * delay_upper_joins is set TRUE if we detect a pushed-down clause that has
 * to be evaluated after this join is formed (because it references the RHS).
 * Any outer joins that have such a clause and this join in their RHS cannot
 * commute with this join, because that would leave noplace to check the
 * pushed-down clause.  (We don't track this for FULL JOINs, either.)
 *
 * For a semijoin, we also extract the join operators and their RHS arguments
 * and set semi_operators, semi_rhs_exprs, semi_can_btree, and semi_can_hash.
 * This is done in support of possibly unique-ifying the RHS, so we don't
 * bother unless at least one of semi_can_btree and semi_can_hash can be set
 * true.  (You might expect that this information would be computed during
 * join planning; but it's helpful to have it available during planning of
 * parameterized table scans, so we store it in the SpecialJoinInfo structs.)
 *
 * jointype is never JOIN_RIGHT; a RIGHT JOIN is handled by switching
 * the inputs to make it a LEFT JOIN.  So the allowed values of jointype
 * in a join_info_list member are only LEFT, FULL, SEMI, or ANTI.
 *
 * For purposes of join selectivity estimation, we create transient
 * SpecialJoinInfo structures for regular inner joins; so it is possible
 * to have jointype == JOIN_INNER in such a structure, even though this is
 * not allowed within join_info_list.  We also create transient
 * SpecialJoinInfos with jointype == JOIN_INNER for outer joins, since for
 * cost estimation purposes it is sometimes useful to know the join size under
 * plain innerjoin semantics.  Note that lhs_strict, delay_upper_joins, and
 * of course the semi_xxx fields are not set meaningfully within such structs.
 */

typedef struct SpecialJoinInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;
    Relids        min_lefthand;    /* base relids in minimum LHS for join */
    Relids        min_righthand;    /* base relids in minimum RHS for join */
    Relids        syn_lefthand;    /* base relids syntactically within LHS */
    Relids        syn_righthand;    /* base relids syntactically within RHS */
    JoinType    jointype;        /* always INNER, LEFT, FULL, SEMI, or ANTI */
    bool        lhs_strict;        /* joinclause is strict for some LHS rel */
    bool        delay_upper_joins;    /* can't commute with upper RHS */
    /* Remaining fields are set only for JOIN_SEMI jointype: */
    bool        semi_can_btree; /* true if semi_operators are all btree */
    bool        semi_can_hash;    /* true if semi_operators are all hash */
    List       *semi_operators; /* OIDs of equality join operators */
    List       *semi_rhs_exprs; /* righthand-side expressions of these ops */
} SpecialJoinInfo;

/*
 * Append-relation info.
 *
 * When we expand an inheritable table or a UNION-ALL subselect into an
 * "append relation" (essentially, a list of child RTEs), we build an
 * AppendRelInfo for each child RTE.  The list of AppendRelInfos indicates
 * which child RTEs must be included when expanding the parent, and each node
 * carries information needed to translate Vars referencing the parent into
 * Vars referencing that child.
 *
 * These structs are kept in the PlannerInfo node's append_rel_list.
 * Note that we just throw all the structs into one list, and scan the
 * whole list when desiring to expand any one parent.  We could have used
 * a more complex data structure (eg, one list per parent), but this would
 * be harder to update during operations such as pulling up subqueries,
 * and not really any easier to scan.  Considering that typical queries
 * will not have many different append parents, it doesn't seem worthwhile
 * to complicate things.
 *
 * Note: after completion of the planner prep phase, any given RTE is an
 * append parent having entries in append_rel_list if and only if its
 * "inh" flag is set.  We clear "inh" for plain tables that turn out not
 * to have inheritance children, and (in an abuse of the original meaning
 * of the flag) we set "inh" for subquery RTEs that turn out to be
 * flattenable UNION ALL queries.  This lets us avoid useless searches
 * of append_rel_list.
 *
 * Note: the data structure assumes that append-rel members are single
 * baserels.  This is OK for inheritance, but it prevents us from pulling
 * up a UNION ALL member subquery if it contains a join.  While that could
 * be fixed with a more complex data structure, at present there's not much
 * point because no improvement in the plan could result.
 */

typedef struct AppendRelInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    /*
     * These fields uniquely identify this append relationship.  There can be
     * (in fact, always should be) multiple AppendRelInfos for the same
     * parent_relid, but never more than one per child_relid, since a given
     * RTE cannot be a child of more than one append parent.
     */
    Index        parent_relid;    /* RT index of append parent rel */
    Index        child_relid;    /* RT index of append child rel */

    /*
     * For an inheritance appendrel, the parent and child are both regular
     * relations, and we store their rowtype OIDs here for use in translating
     * whole-row Vars.  For a UNION-ALL appendrel, the parent and child are
     * both subqueries with no named rowtype, and we store InvalidOid here.
     */
    Oid            parent_reltype; /* OID of parent's composite type */
    Oid            child_reltype;    /* OID of child's composite type */

    /*
     * The N'th element of this list is a Var or expression representing the
     * child column corresponding to the N'th column of the parent. This is
     * used to translate Vars referencing the parent rel into references to
     * the child.  A list element is NULL if it corresponds to a dropped
     * column of the parent (this is only possible for inheritance cases, not
     * UNION ALL).  The list elements are always simple Vars for inheritance
     * cases, but can be arbitrary expressions in UNION ALL cases.
     *
     * Notice we only store entries for user columns (attno > 0).  Whole-row
     * Vars are special-cased, and system columns (attno < 0) need no special
     * translation since their attnos are the same for all tables.
     *
     * Caution: the Vars have varlevelsup = 0.  Be careful to adjust as needed
     * when copying into a subquery.
     */
    List       *translated_vars;    /* Expressions in the child's Vars */

    /*
     * We store the parent table's OID here for inheritance, or InvalidOid for
     * UNION ALL.  This is only needed to help in generating error messages if
     * an attempt is made to reference a dropped parent column.
     */
    Oid            parent_reloid;    /* OID of parent relation */
} AppendRelInfo;

/*
 * For each distinct placeholder expression generated during planning, we
 * store a PlaceHolderInfo node in the PlannerInfo node's placeholder_list.
 * This stores info that is needed centrally rather than in each copy of the
 * PlaceHolderVar.  The phid fields identify which PlaceHolderInfo goes with
 * each PlaceHolderVar.  Note that phid is unique throughout a planner run,
 * not just within a query level --- this is so that we need not reassign ID's
 * when pulling a subquery into its parent.
 *
 * The idea is to evaluate the expression at (only) the ph_eval_at join level,
 * then allow it to bubble up like a Var until the ph_needed join level.
 * ph_needed has the same definition as attr_needed for a regular Var.
 *
 * The PlaceHolderVar's expression might contain LATERAL references to vars
 * coming from outside its syntactic scope.  If so, those rels are *not*
 * included in ph_eval_at, but they are recorded in ph_lateral.
 *
 * Notice that when ph_eval_at is a join rather than a single baserel, the
 * PlaceHolderInfo may create constraints on join order: the ph_eval_at join
 * has to be formed below any outer joins that should null the PlaceHolderVar.
 *
 * We create a PlaceHolderInfo only after determining that the PlaceHolderVar
 * is actually referenced in the plan tree, so that unreferenced placeholders
 * don't result in unnecessary constraints on join order.
 */

typedef struct PlaceHolderInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Index        phid;            /* ID for PH (unique within planner run) */
    PlaceHolderVar *ph_var;        /* copy of PlaceHolderVar tree */
    Relids        ph_eval_at;        /* lowest level we can evaluate value at */
    Relids        ph_lateral;        /* relids of contained lateral refs, if any */
    Relids        ph_needed;        /* highest level the value is needed at */
    int32        ph_width;        /* estimated attribute width */
} PlaceHolderInfo;

/*
 * This struct describes one potentially index-optimizable MIN/MAX aggregate
 * function.  MinMaxAggPath contains a list of these, and if we accept that
 * path, the list is stored into root->minmax_aggs for use during setrefs.c.
 */
typedef struct MinMaxAggInfo
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Oid            aggfnoid;        /* pg_proc Oid of the aggregate */
    Oid            aggsortop;        /* Oid of its sort operator */
    Expr       *target;            /* expression we are aggregating on */
    PlannerInfo *subroot;        /* modified "root" for planning the subquery */
    Path       *path;            /* access path for subquery */
    Cost        pathcost;        /* estimated cost to fetch first row */
    Param       *param;            /* param for subplan's output */
} MinMaxAggInfo;

/*
 * At runtime, PARAM_EXEC slots are used to pass values around from one plan
 * node to another.  They can be used to pass values down into subqueries (for
 * outer references in subqueries), or up out of subqueries (for the results
 * of a subplan), or from a NestLoop plan node into its inner relation (when
 * the inner scan is parameterized with values from the outer relation).
 * The planner is responsible for assigning nonconflicting PARAM_EXEC IDs to
 * the PARAM_EXEC Params it generates.
 *
 * Outer references are managed via root->plan_params, which is a list of
 * PlannerParamItems.  While planning a subquery, each parent query level's
 * plan_params contains the values required from it by the current subquery.
 * During create_plan(), we use plan_params to track values that must be
 * passed from outer to inner sides of NestLoop plan nodes.
 *
 * The item a PlannerParamItem represents can be one of three kinds:
 *
 * A Var: the slot represents a variable of this level that must be passed
 * down because subqueries have outer references to it, or must be passed
 * from a NestLoop node to its inner scan.  The varlevelsup value in the Var
 * will always be zero.
 *
 * A PlaceHolderVar: this works much like the Var case, except that the
 * entry is a PlaceHolderVar node with a contained expression.  The PHV
 * will have phlevelsup = 0, and the contained expression is adjusted
 * to match in level.
 *
 * An Aggref (with an expression tree representing its argument): the slot
 * represents an aggregate expression that is an outer reference for some
 * subquery.  The Aggref itself has agglevelsup = 0, and its argument tree
 * is adjusted to match in level.
 *
 * Note: we detect duplicate Var and PlaceHolderVar parameters and coalesce
 * them into one slot, but we do not bother to do that for Aggrefs.
 * The scope of duplicate-elimination only extends across the set of
 * parameters passed from one query level into a single subquery, or for
 * nestloop parameters across the set of nestloop parameters used in a single
 * query level.  So there is no possibility of a PARAM_EXEC slot being used
 * for conflicting purposes.
 *
 * In addition, PARAM_EXEC slots are assigned for Params representing outputs
 * from subplans (values that are setParam items for those subplans).  These
 * IDs need not be tracked via PlannerParamItems, since we do not need any
 * duplicate-elimination nor later processing of the represented expressions.
 * Instead, we just record the assignment of the slot number by incrementing
 * root->glob->nParamExec.
 */
typedef struct PlannerParamItem
{
    NodeTag        type;

    Node       *item;            /* the Var, PlaceHolderVar, or Aggref */
    int            paramId;        /* its assigned PARAM_EXEC slot number */
} PlannerParamItem;

/*
 * When making cost estimates for a SEMI/ANTI/inner_unique join, there are
 * some correction factors that are needed in both nestloop and hash joins
 * to account for the fact that the executor can stop scanning inner rows
 * as soon as it finds a match to the current outer row.  These numbers
 * depend only on the selected outer and inner join relations, not on the
 * particular paths used for them, so it's worthwhile to calculate them
 * just once per relation pair not once per considered path.  This struct
 * is filled by compute_semi_anti_join_factors and must be passed along
 * to the join cost estimation functions.
 *
 * outer_match_frac is the fraction of the outer tuples that are
 *        expected to have at least one match.
 * match_count is the average number of matches expected for
 *        outer tuples that have at least one match.
 */
typedef struct SemiAntiJoinFactors
{
    Selectivity outer_match_frac;
    Selectivity match_count;
} SemiAntiJoinFactors;

/*
 * Struct for extra information passed to subroutines of add_paths_to_joinrel
 *
 * restrictlist contains all of the RestrictInfo nodes for restriction
 *        clauses that apply to this join
 * mergeclause_list is a list of RestrictInfo nodes for available
 *        mergejoin clauses in this join
 * inner_unique is true if each outer tuple provably matches no more
 *        than one inner tuple
 * sjinfo is extra info about special joins for selectivity estimation
 * semifactors is as shown above (only valid for SEMI/ANTI/inner_unique joins)
 * param_source_rels are OK targets for parameterization of result paths
 */
typedef struct JoinPathExtraData
{
    List       *restrictlist;
    List       *mergeclause_list;
    bool        inner_unique;
    SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo;
    SemiAntiJoinFactors semifactors;
    Relids        param_source_rels;
} JoinPathExtraData;

/*
 * For speed reasons, cost estimation for join paths is performed in two
 * phases: the first phase tries to quickly derive a lower bound for the
 * join cost, and then we check if that's sufficient to reject the path.
 * If not, we come back for a more refined cost estimate.  The first phase
 * fills a JoinCostWorkspace struct with its preliminary cost estimates
 * and possibly additional intermediate values.  The second phase takes
 * these values as inputs to avoid repeating work.
 *
 * (Ideally we'd declare this in cost.h, but it's also needed in pathnode.h,
 * so seems best to put it here.)
 */
typedef struct JoinCostWorkspace
{
    /* Preliminary cost estimates --- must not be larger than final ones! */
    Cost        startup_cost;    /* cost expended before fetching any tuples */
    Cost        total_cost;        /* total cost (assuming all tuples fetched) */

    /* Fields below here should be treated as private to costsize.c */
    Cost        run_cost;        /* non-startup cost components */

    /* private for cost_nestloop code */
    Cost        inner_run_cost; /* also used by cost_mergejoin code */
    Cost        inner_rescan_run_cost;

    /* private for cost_mergejoin code */
    double        outer_rows;
    double        inner_rows;
    double        outer_skip_rows;
    double        inner_skip_rows;

    /* private for cost_hashjoin code */
    int            numbuckets;
    int            numbatches;
} JoinCostWorkspace;

#endif                            /* RELATION_H */
